 the one and only nine Hines of the Indianapolis Colts, AKA my favorite weapon to use and madden because you can't stop them in the slot. For you in this position at this point in your career, man, you know, another season on the horizon, new off-season reconnected with teammates, connected with new teammates, such as quarterback Carson Wentz. How has that process been like so far? A blessing. The good, the bad, you take it out of your comes and no matter how it comes, just be ready. And that's really what it's like being in the NFL. My first two years, I didn't take it for granted, but I also wasn't as appreciative as I should be. And this is, you know how it is. People come, people go, and just having the opportunity to play with Phillip Rivers, one of my all-time favorites, watching him in his career, and Carson, who I was a big fan of, waking up every day and being what people used to watch on TV, like T.Y., it's every day. And then you realize you're just people. It's really a blessing. And honestly, even just playing on that field and being in that locker room, I really can't tell you, it's honestly surreal. It'll probably be surreal if I'm playing in the league for 20 years. I bet your Tom Brady still can't believe it. I'm happy you said that, Nahim, because when it does come to those surreal moments or that walking to the NFL moment that we all hear about, do you remember it coming in the form of a play or when you looked across the sidelines and you saw Lee, I used to watch Buddy growing up and now me and him about the battle for 60 minutes. When I first got to any of the first day, I met Andrew, he walks up to me and he says, hey Nahim, you know, I had a great career in C-State. I followed you, you know, I had a great career. I'm like, dang, like he kept up with me, that's cool. But I think my first real moment like that was with Adrian Peterson. It was actually the second game in my career, first touchdown of my career. And I'm with Jordan Wilkins, another running back from my draft class. And he goes, hey Nahim, if you said a couple of years back, you'd be on a field with Adrian Peterson. What would you say? I was like, heck no, it would never happen. But saying that, then scoring touchdown, then talking to APF in the game and you know, just him giving me some respect and telling me how to, you know, be a better player as to be something I'm practicing my kids about. One thing that has been very evident about your career so far, man, is your versatility. You know, whether it's running back, traditional role, in the slot, returning punts. How have you been able to maintain your comfort in your rhythm, especially in what is a loaded offense where there's a rotation? I'm a third out there every time I touch the ball. If I'm on the field once or a hundred times, I know that same thread is there. And really, I think it's just remaining confident in yourself, knowing your role. And like it's not high school and college no more. You don't got to touch the ball a million times for us to win. I can touch the ball five, somebody else touch the ball 10, and that's what we do to win. So at every time you're on that field, you have to make the most of the opportunity. And that's what I really brought myself on. One thing I want to touch on is, wow, which is harder to win? An NBA championship or a Super Bowl? A Super Bowl for sure. I agree. I mean, like any person who argues that and literally just listen to the term every dog has his day. In basketball, you can have your day and then you still got three more games to come back. At football, you have a bad day, that's what happens. Sometimes the Super Bowl, the best team doesn't even win. Might be just being the best coach team, the team that executed the best that day, the team that didn't beat themselves. And that's what I'd really have to say to argue. Hey, I'm with you. Even when I'm winning my chips with you and Madden, I agree. It is still hard winning Super Bowls compared to NBA title, even though that is hard too. You've been able to play with different quarterbacks. There's Philip Rivers, there's Jacobi Prasad, there's a love. How have you been able to adjust to each quarterback? You first off, it's just a person. You have to understand them as a person. You have to observe them, see how they are. And they're really to his quarterback to listen to what they like and just be transparent. Like we're talking about certain routes. Hey Carson, on this one, I might speed it up because I know at the top of the round I do this. And it really just builds on that trust and that communication. Then you got to go out there and ball. So just knowing who that is, knowing what he likes and just talking to him. Getting those extra routes, getting that extra time. And him hearing how I think and adjusting to my body language. We both have to get close to each other. If I'm going to go across the middle, he's going to throw me open or expect me to be there. And that's really how you do it with, no matter who it is, just like your job. When you first go in there and you meet somebody new, you can't just go in there and give them everything. You got to go in there, fill them out, get to know them. Give them the trust you. And they show them that you're here for the long run. Teamwork makes the dream work. That is a fact. Hey, Diane, seriously, man. Thank you once again for this interview. Seriously, this is awesome, man. Thank you. Man, thank you. Thanks for having me on. Hope to be back. Absolutely. Hope to talk to you soon. Aaron Dolan here. Thanks for watching and make sure you click below on that subscribe button for more great Fando content and check out some of our latest uploads and playlists right over here.